30 March 2014 Edition

Shatter should walk the plank

If Martin Callinan has to go because his position is untenable then the very man who defended him up until this point, Justice Minister Shatter, should go as well – Gerry Adams TD

THE SHOCK REVELATION that the Garda have
been illegally recording phone calls at Garda stations for more than 30 years –
coming on the same day as the sudden resignation of Garda Commissioner Martin
Callinan (25 March) – has ramped up the pressure on Justice Minister Alan
Shatter to also “walk the plank”, Sinn Féin TD Pádraig Mac Lochlainn said.

The recording of phone calls at Garda
stations has such huge ramifications for the judicial process andconvictions
that the Taoiseach personally briefed Gerry Adams and other party leaders
before announcing to the Dáil that he has instituted a commission of inquiry
into the practice.

Justice Minister Shatter was to make a
statement to the Dáil as An Phoblacht went to press.

The Garda Commissioner chose to resign rather
than apologise to the two Garda whistleblowers whose actions in exposing
widespread malpractice within An Garda Síochána he described as “disgusting”
when he appeared before the Oireachtas Public Accounts Committee.

Announcing his resignation, Callinan said
he felt “recent developments were proving to be a distraction from the
important work that is carried out by An Garda Síochána on a daily basis”.

• Garda Sergeant Maurice McCabe and Retired Garda John Wilson

Garda Sergeant Maurice McCabe and retired
Garda John Wilson helped to expose the mishandling of cases and thousands of
incidents where penalty points notices and fines were ‘fixed’ and cancelled on
the Garda computer system.

On 23 January, while being quizzed by the
Public Accounts Committee, the Commissioner (who was appointed to his positon
by Fianna Fáil) described the actions of the two Garda whistleblowers as
“disgusting”.

While Sinn Féin and Independent TDs had
long called for the Garda Commissioner to withdraw the remark and apologise or
resign, he finally walked after
Fine Gael Transport Minister Leo Varadkar – eight weeks later! – ramped up the
public pressure on him by adding his voice to calls for an apology. The Labour
Party then came out to play catch-up, with no fewer than five of their Cabinet
ministers also belatedly calling for an apology.

• Justice spokesperson Pádraig Mac LochlainnTD

Sinn Féin Justice Spokesperon Pádraig Mac
Lochlainn, who chairs the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Public Service
Oversight and Petitions, welcomed the Commissioner’s resignation, calling it
“the right decision”. Criticising the Commissioner for his attempts to downplay
and dismiss reports of widespread malpractice within the police service, he
added:

“Worse, he repeatedly sought to discredit
the credibility of the two whistleblowers which culminated in the outrageous
‘disgusting’ comment at the Public Accounts Committee.”

Now the spotlight is firmly on Justice
Minister Alan Shatter, who has come in for widespread criticism over his
handling of the scandals.

In October, Shatter wrongly claimed that
whistleblowers had not co-operated with the internal Garda inquiry into the
penalty points issue. Some claimed he misled the Dáil although there were
claims he was given wrong information. Despite that, he refused to set the Dáil
record straight, withdraw that allegation or apologise to the two
whistleblowers.

Pádraig Mac Lochlainn told Jonathan Healy
on Newstalk radio on Tuesday 25 March immediately after the Garda
Commissioner’s resignation that the Justice Minister too “should walk the
plank.

• Gerry Adams TD

Speaking on the Today with Seán O’Rourke
show on RTÉ Radio following the Commissioner’s resignation, Sinn Féin President
Gerry Adams TD said:

“The culture that Martin Callinan came to
represent in the end was to attack the whistleblowers. The lead on that was
given by the Minister for Justice who attacked them on a number of occasions
and set the tone, right back to when he attacked Mick Wallace TD, who raised
the issue in the first instance.

“If Martin Callinan has to go because his
position is untenable then the very man who defended him up until this point,
Justice Minister Shatter, should go as well.”